Thesis Defence: Caleb Mathias (Master of Science in Natural Resources and Environmental Studies)

Date
to
Location
Hakai Lab and/or Zoom
Campus
Prince George
Online

You are encouraged to attend the defence. The details of the defence and attendance information is included below:  

Date: April 7, 2025
Time: 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM (PT)

Defence mode: Hybrid
In-Person Attendance: Hakai Lab, UNBC Prince George Campus  
Virtual Attendance: via Zoom 

LINK TO JOIN: Please contact the Office of Graduate Administration for information regarding remote attendance for online defences. 

To ensure the defence proceeds with no interruptions, please mute your audio and video on entry and do not inadvertently share your screen. The meeting will be locked to entry 5 minutes after it begins: please ensure you are on time.  

Thesis entitled: LATE QUATERNARY GLACIER FLUCTUATIONS, ITSI RANGE, YUKON TERRITORY

Abstract: Understanding past glacier fluctuations is critical for understanding Holocene paleoclimate, yet glacier chronologies in the northeastern Canadian Cordillera remain sparse and are frequently obscured by the occurrence of geologic scatter. This thesis reconstructs late Pleistocene and Holocene glacier changes in the Itsi Range, Yukon Territory, and examines processes driving regionally consistent scatter in moraine ages. Using terrestrial in situ 10Be surface exposure dating, I identify two Little Ice Age advances at the Itsi Glacier among the Itsi Range: 0.96 ka ± 0.36 (outer moraine) and 0.20 ka ± 0.05 (inner moraine). Erratics dated to 11.68 ka ± 0.54 indicate Cordilleran Ice Sheet retreat concurrent with the Younger Dryas termination. To contextualize the Itsi Glacier chronology with other regional advances, I compiled 10Be dated moraine records across western North America moraines organized by moraine morphostratigraphic position as denoted by end groups 1 – 3. The Itsi Glacier inner moraine aligns closely with end group 1 (0.13 ka ± 0.10), while outer moraine ages reflect significant scatter, mirroring the poorly constrained end group 2 record (0.46 ka ± 0.35). Distinctions among end group 1 and 2 moraine ages across latitudes suggest that northeastern Canadian Cordillera glaciers emplaced their moraines centuries earlier than those in the southwest. I assess the western North America moraine record with relevant multicentennial-scale climate proxy records to deduce what factors influence glacier growth and retreat. Late Holocene advances were driven by orbital forcing, with additional contributions from temperature, precipitation, greenhouse gas emissions, and solar irradiance anomalies coherent with end group 1 culminations. End group 2 moraine scatter complicates its climatic interpretation. A parsimonious explanation for the inconsistencies among end group 2 moraine ages point to the result of amalgamated moraines, heterogeneous mixtures of previously exposed and reincorporated moraine boulders, deposited between 3.54 – 2.50 ka during the Tiedemann-Peyto Advance. Further research must be carried out to quantify geomorphic uncertainties inherent to techniques of cosmogenic nuclide dating.

Defence Committee:  
Chair: Dr. Thomas Tannert
Supervisor: Dr. Brian Menounos
Committee Member: Dr. Roger Wheate
Committee Member: Dr. Joerg Schaefer
External Examiner: Dr. Alberto Reyes

Contact Information

Graduate Administration in the Office of the Registrar, University of Northern British Columbia